A Christmas Eve storm brought widespread snow to Colorado, including 20 inches on some parts of Grand Mesa in western Colorado.

On Thursday, the Wolf Creek ski resort in southwestern Colorado reported 11 inches of new snow from another storm. Steamboat Springs reported 9 inches of new snow on Thursday and Winter Park reported 8.

The timing was perfect for the holidays, especially for skiers, Doesken said.

"It's just got the right look for this time of year," he said.

Doesken said the forecast for the first part of 2013 doesn't include much moisture, and the longer range outlook is uncertain.

Conditions in the Pacific Ocean determine some long-distance weather patterns, which in turn affect snowfall in the West. So far, the Pacific has yielded few clues about those patterns, Doesken said.

The U.S. Drought Monitor shows Colorado conditions ranging from moderate - the middle of the five-step scale - to exceptional drought, the worst end of the scale.

Moderate conditions prevail along the northern Front Range from the Denver area to the Wyoming border. An uneven swath from northern to southwestern Colorado has severe drought conditions, while the rest of the state has either extreme or exceptional drought conditions.